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The Art of Discovery Helping Students Find Inspiration in Unlikely Places

The Art of Discovery Helping Students Find Inspiration in Unlikely Places. Anne Jumonville & Dr. Kelly Grey Carlisle, Trinity University LOEX 5/10/14. Why?. Creative Nonfiction.

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The Art of Discovery Helping Students Find Inspiration in Unlikely Places

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  1. The Art of DiscoveryHelping Students Find Inspiration in Unlikely Places Anne Jumonville & Dr. Kelly Grey Carlisle, Trinity University LOEX 5/10/14

  2. Why?

  3. Creative Nonfiction • Factually accurate prose about real events, people, and phenomena made more vivid and compelling through the use of literary techniques from fiction and poetry. • Memoir, personal writing, nature writing, literary journalism, etc.

  4. Research in Creative Nonfiction Content Literary Craft/”Creative” Facts used to build setting, characterization, etc. Used to engage readers’ interest. • What the essay or book is about. • Provides essential information for writer and reader.

  5. Research to Inspire • Works in poetry and fiction, as well as other art forms. • Reading research and information learned through it can inspire new creative work or help a writer make unexpected, fresh connections in an existing work. • Facts can serve as metaphors or images • Research can create new connections or deepen understanding • Creates “Aha!” moments for writer and reader.

  6. Inspiration and Research • Developing the habits of a writer can make inspiration more likely to happen. • Reading, browsing in the library, and paying attention to one’s surrounding are all habits that encourage inspiration. • Inspiration is a happy accident, less likely to happen through conscious, focused searching.

  7. Goals for library visit • Overcome student resistance to reading research. • Change student perceptions of research as uncreative drudgery. • Help students to experience inspiration and make happy discoveries through reading research. • Make the library an exciting place.

  8. Against the (information literacy) grain

  9. Information literacy guidelines* often… • Assume a known information “need” • Value efficiency and clear end goals/products • Prioritize strategic searching • Emphasize the development of expertise in scholarly forms/formats • Aim at what’s assessable *Association of College and Research Libraries. “Information Literacy Competency Standards for Higher Education.” January, 2000. http://www.ala.org/acrl/standards/informationliteracycompetency. ACRL Information Literacy Competency Standards for Higher Education Task Force. “Framework for Information Literacy for Higher Education.” Draft. February, 2014. http://acrl.ala.org/ilstandards/.

  10. Other approaches (not as well integrated in IL pedagogy) • Information Science research on experiences of serendipity, inspiration; behavior and information seeking habits of artists* • Library Science research on the library as a place for artistic/creative process and discovery** • Creative Writing pedagogies *Hemmig, William. "An Empirical Study of the Information-Seeking Behavior of Practicing Visual Artists." Journal of Documentation 65.4 (2009): 682-703. **Aurand, Martin. "Teaching and Learning with Collections: The Library as a Site for Exploration and Inspiration." Art Documentation: Bulletin of the Art Libraries Society of North America 30.1 (2011): 12-20.

  11. Into the LibraryTreasury!

  12. From a family story… From something I read… I was interested to learn…

  13. In the classroom

  14. Enacting Inspiration • Read examples of research-driven texts before and after library visit. Point out presence of research when less obvious. • Small stakes exercises that reinforce learning from library session. • Feedback that encourages including research where fitting in larger creative projects, like essay drafts.

  15. Reinforcement exercises • Exercise for inspiration (handout “Exercise 3”) • Due at class period following library session. • Encourages students to “geek out” without the usual formal requirements of citation and source incorporation. • Exercise for revision (handout “Exercise 6”) • Due after first long essay draft, a few weeks after session. • Reviews library session material through online video. • Encourages students to incorporate research into an extant essay draft as a form of revision.

  16. Assessment Strategies

  17. Research vs Inspiration • Sporadic • Stumbled upon • Emotional attachment • Sparks further interest • Systematic • “Information needs” • Fact-based • Goal-oriented

  18. Research and Inspiration (experience) (action) • Lead to something new (Discovery) • Influence each other (Coactivating) “You can find inspiration while doing research” ““They both tend to require ‘new’ information” ““ Research is a way to further inspiration and ground it in facts”

  19. Results

  20. Help dealing with difficult situations (5) • More likely to try new experiences (3) • See the ordinary as extraordinary (3) • More attentive to surroundings (4)

  21. Student Writing

  22. Recreation of a Historical Scene “Bloodlines” by Student A

  23. Recreation of a Historical Scene “Bloodlines” by Student A

  24. Discovering the Significance of a Topic “Gay Bathhouse Draft” by Student B

  25. Using Research to Create a Metaphor “When You Find Yourself In a Hole, Dig for Dear Life” by Student C

  26. Implications for Practice • The library IS a treasury. • You can’t measure curiosity and wonder,* but experimenting with different assessment methods can still be instructive. • Creative nonfiction writing offers an alternative research framework applicable to other courses. • The language and goals of artists and creative writers should be more intentionally included in information literacy pedagogy. *Jacobs, Heidi L.M. “Minding the Gaps: Exploring the Space Between Vision and Assessment in Information Literacy Work." Communications in Information Literacy 7.2 (2013): n. pag. Web. 9 May 2014.

  27. Thank you!Questions?

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